Zoonotic disease knowledge, attitudes, and practices in Chuquisaca, Bolivia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15381/anales.v86i1.29499Keywords:
Zoonoses, Animal Feed, Animals Wild, Bonding Human-Pet, BoliviaAbstract
Introduction. About 60% of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic, originating mainly from wildlife. Objective. To identify knowledge, attitudes, and practices associated with zoonotic transmission risks in communities in urban, rural, and protected areas to prevent potential zoonotic outbreaks. Methods. Cross-sectional study in a representative sample stratified by zones (urban, rural and protected areas) and age groups. A standardized questionnaire in Spanish and Quechua, adapted to the local context, was applied to explore sociodemographic data, contact with animals, attitudes towards wildlife, their trade and consumption, and knowledge about zoonotic diseases and sources of information. Trained local interviewers visited households and recorded information using the ODK application on electronic tablets. Frequencies were described and the chi-square test was used to compare the distribution by area. Results. A total of 922 people participated. Rabies was recognized in the highest percentage (57.3%), Chagas disease (36.1%) and yellow fever (11.5%). Few participants had previous training on zoonosis (8.9%), the majority in the protected area (13.5%). There was concern about zoonosis outbreaks (70.7%), and (70.7%) indicated that wild animals should be protected, significantly different between study areas. (76.4%) have close contact with animals; (62.5%) handle some of them freshly slaughtered; (35.2%) noted the presence of animal feces in or near food; (13.3%) indicated selling, ingesting or sharing dead animals collected from animals. Conclusions. Low knowledge, perceptions, and practices of high zoonotic risk in human-animal interactions were identified, significantly different between areas of residence.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Dennis Méndez, Marcia Adler, Fabiana Marcela Pérez Morales, Carlos F. Pinto, María Teresa Solís Soto

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Those authors who have publications with this magazine accept the following terms:
- Authors will retain their copyrights and guarantee the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will be simultaneously subject to Creative Commons Attribution License that allows third parties to share the work as long as its author and its first publication this magazine are indicated.
- Authors may adopt other non-exclusive licensing agreements for the distribution of the version of the published work (eg, deposit it in an institutional electronic file or publish it in a monographic volume) provided that the initial publication in this magazine is indicated.
- Authors are allowed and recommended to disseminate their work over the Internet (eg: in institutional telematic archives or on their website) before and during the submission process, which It can produce interesting exchanges and increase quotes from the published work. (See El efecto del acceso abierto ).